HVVA NEWSLETTER, FEBRUARY, 2004


FROM THE JOURNAL

Thursday, January 29, 2004 Met with Todd Scheff and Dave Minch at the General Putnam 2-story brick house in Upper Red Hook (Dut-RH-21) that has recently been bought and is undergoing restoration. The historic marker dates the house to 1740 but the only clear evidence we found is early Federal, late 18th century, with English framing. The floors are supported on summer beams and joists. The gable roof, perhaps an alteration, is framed with sawn rafters resting on a hewn ridge beam that is supported on king posts. It is a rafter system I have never seen before on an historic Hudson Valley building. The ridge beam and posts are re-used. The house contains many original features.

We drove to the Conyn/Van Rensselaer house(Col-Cla-6) on Spook Rock Road in Claverack and met with Alvin Sheffer to examine the house. Dave Minch, an architect from Saugerties, had come along for his knowledgeable input on how to restore the three damaged beams in the room that had the jambless fireplace. He has four ideas and will write them up. We discover that the roofers in the loft and the boards in the hearth cradle in the cellar are all feathered, angled-lap, a feature common in fine 18th century houses in Albany County but not found in Dutchess and Ulster Counties to the south. Its use is thought by some to act as a plank roof, to shed water, and by other that the feathering was a way to strengthen the surface.

We go to Nancy Ginsberg's house in Claverack, the present owner, and talk with her about the restoration project. She has located some used fir beams for sale in Pine Plains. Dave has told us that the strength of beams can easily be tested. He did it recently at the Kierstead house in Saugerties.

Among us there is an interest in the history and geography of this area of Columbia and northern Dutchess Counties that lies between the Livingston and Rensselaer Patents. There have been many changes to the roads and traffic patterns in the area. Many of the original roads and paths are hidden in the contemporary landscape. There remain a number of 18th century buildings in the area that would be interesting to map, document and compare.


From the Editor; The committee of the Palatine Farmstead in Rhinebeck, Dutchess County, voted to allow HVVA to use the south loft room of the house as a temporary home and a place to organize a display concerning the hay barrack. The room is simply finished and whitewashed, 15'9" wide and 13'7" deep. with a 6'8" ceiling. It has two windows. It is presently used for storage of artifacts found at the site. These will be moved to the north room.

We are hoping to have a good meeting this week-end (January 14) at the Marbletown firehouse. There are a number of new topics to discuss including the offer of a house and Dutch barn in Milford, New Jersey that is about to be repaired and made available by the National Parks Service. Hubert de Leeuw, our friend from Belgium is working with ICOMOS, the organization that sponsored the recent Year of the Farm Conference in Holland, to bring foreign interns to America to help in the work of a Dutch barn and vernacular architecture study and inventory. Hubert stresses that the project needs to cover a wide area and show collaboration between regional groups.

The Dutch Barn Society (DBPS) has a new home in Schenectady County at the Mabee Farm Historic Site, 1080 Main Street, Rotterdam Junction, NY 12150. Kieth Cramer has already sent a letter to the US/ICOMOS in Washington, DC expressing the DBPS interest in the intern project. Peter Sinclair, Editor: Spillway Farm, West Hurley, NY

New HVV A Headquarters. South Loft Room
Palatine Farmstead (Dut-Rhi-20) Rhinebeck, Dutchess Co., NY

Note: Included in this newsletter was the special report on the Solite Dutch Barn.

SPECIAL REPORT


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